NSA and FBI privacy abuses were rampant during George W.
Bush's time in office and have continued in the Obama years, indicating these
agencies have no intention of changing and lining up with the law of the land

Two days later on August 24, 2013, the Washington Post and other credible
news outlets reported NSA employees have been illegally spying on love
interests, spouses and girlfriends (see article excerpt below). It has become
another scandal.

FBI Director Robert S. Mueller is on his way out as the
head of the agency after engaging in unprecedented abuses

Three and a half years ago, the in the January 19, 2010 time stamped and
copyrighted article "FBI
Collected Thousands Of Phone Records Illegally" the Judiciary
Report stated of the NSAís sister agency the FBI, "Targets selected for
surveillance, such as specific scientists, political scientists, inventors,
journalists, political bloggers, activists and politicians to name a few, had
their privacy thoroughly violated by Mueller and FBI HQ, via the FBI employees
he instructed to do so. Granted, some FBI agents of their own accord,
abused this privilege to pry into the lives of wives and girlfriends, even women
they wanted to pursue sexually."

Director Of National Intelligence, over the NSA, James
Clapper. He's not as massive a criminal as FBI Director Robert S. Mueller
Mueller, but looked the other way to privacy abuses and recently admitted to
lying to the U.S. Congress about his misconduct

Once again, the Judiciary Reportís previous time stamped, copyrighted
claims have been proven true and correct. I do not enjoy writing these types of
stories or breaking them for that matter, but whatís being done by certain
government employees is wholly wrong. Iíve been a target of illegal
surveillance by the government and it is really something I could have done
without, as it is exploitative and leaves one feeling very violated.

After the scandal went mainstream, on August 24, 2013 members of Congress
announced they are investigating the matter. In closing, if someone didnít do
anything illegal warranting government surveillance, they really should not be
spied on. Itís not fair. Itís not a matter of being secretive or having
anything to hide, but people deserve privacy. What innocent people say over the
phone, do on the internet and in their homes in nobodyís business but their
own.

Published: August 24 at 11:50 - The National Security Agency admitted in a
statement Friday that there have been "very rare" instances of willful
violations of agency protocols by agency officers. The Wall Street Journal
reports that some of those willful violations involved officials turning their
private eyes on love interests:

The practice isnít frequent ó one official estimated a handful of cases
in the last decade ó but itís common enough to garner its own spycraft
label: LOVEINT. Spy agencies often refer to their various types of intelligence
collection with the suffix of "INT," such as "SIGINT" for
collecting signals intelligence, or communications; and "HUMINT" for
human intelligence, or spying.

Aug 24, 2013 12:00 AM ET - Surveillance State: Three Ways You're Being
Watched. The leaders of U.S. congressional intelligence committees said they
want to probe the intentional abuses of surveillance authority committed by some
National Security Agency analysts in the past decade.

"I am reviewing each of these incidents in detail," Dianne
Feinstein, a California Democrat and chairman of the Senate intelligence panel,
said in a statement, after the NSA confirmed to Bloomberg News yesterday that
some analysts deliberately ignored restrictions on their authority to spy on
Americans.

"Any case of noncompliance is unacceptable, but these small numbers of
cases do not change my view that NSA takes significant care to prevent any
abuses and that there is a substantial oversight system in place,"
Feinstein said.

The incidents, chronicled by the NSAís inspector general, provide
additional evidence that U.S. intelligence agencies sometimes have violated the
legal and administrative restrictions on domestic spying, and may add to the
pressure to bolster laws that govern intelligence activities.

Republican Representative Mike Rogers of Michigan, chairman of the House
intelligence committee, is reviewing the cases of intentional misconduct in
detail, his spokeswoman, Susan Phalen, said in a statement...